Katewerk wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 2:14 pm
Flanders wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 1:55 pm
Being inconsistent is the reason a stallion's fee is dropped. Breeders want consistency. Honor Code isn't doing good at stud at this point and that's a fact. Its almost October of his first crop's 3yo year, he has 2 SWs. One of which won 1 stakes, the other is retired, but they both made it into the starting gate of the Kentucky Derby and that is pretty amazing for a first crop stallion and just might be enough to pique some breeders interest. Tonalist also has 2 SWs both GSWs, but Tonalist's sales average went from 101k to 48k to 18k. Honor Code's sales numbers are better than that at least. Either way he needs his foals to start winning stakes races. Maybe they'll get better at 4. I hope so because I really liked him when he was racing. His stud fee will be reduced but I imagine most stallions fees will be reduced, except maybe the very very top, I can see The Factor getting a stud fee increase. Constitution is the only one I could see getting a fee increase from his stallion crop.
I can understand breeders not liking a stallion's first crop due to issues of physical traits, such as correctness, size, rate of maturity, etc.
But to measure the worth of a first or second year crop on the basis of winning/not winning stakes races? Is there enough data to rule out statistical noise?
That is how it works, it happens every year. Breeders are fast to make judgements on stallions. Its why Winstar, Spendthrift, etc. sells their 2nd year stallions that aren't doing well, usually in the fall and after the Keeneland yearling sale. A stallion that isn't consistently getting SWs is not going to get mares. Its abnormal for a farm to keep a stallion that isn't getting at least 3% SWs and they are hoping that he does better. I would say most Kentucky stallions with 4 crops of racing age and standing at the big farms have at least 4% SWs to foals of racing age.
If a stallion isn't getting 2yo SWs his first year by the time his 2nd crop yearlings go to auction then his yearling average drops which causes his stud fee and mares bred to drop the following year. If a stallion can show his foals improve dramatically as 3yos then they will all eventually come back up. If he still isn't getting many SWs with his 3yos, its going to be a lot harder.
I know I wrote about Curlin at some point and how cold he went from 2012 to 2013. He went to stud in 2009 for $75,000, his first crop raced in 2012, he got no SWs, his fee dropped to $25,000 for 2013(his fee had been 40k from 2010-2012) and he bred 54 mares to produce 40 foals. He yearling averages thanks to Falinadin was:
Falinadin wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 11:42 am
Curlin (2nd crop average was almost half the first crop average).
2011: $136k,
2012: $69k,
2013: $87k,
2014: $137k,
2020: $342k
But once his first crop hit 3 and they improved dramatically so did his popularity. It took a couple years for everything to come back up but his first crop ended up being 9% SW, his 2nd crop was a little worse but he had proved at that point he could get Classic contenders and now he is one of the most expensive stallions with a very good yearling average price and a solid 7% SWs.
Into Mischief was on the other end of the spectrum. He wasn't well received by breeders, his yearling average was bad, his first four crops had 42, 27, 37 and 37 foals. He started stud at 12.5k, went down every year until it was 7.5k in 2012. But that was the year his 2yos hit the track, he got a lot of SWs and his fee was raised to 20k in 2013 and has went up almost every year since.
2011: 22k
2012: 21k
2013: 48k
2014: 51k
2015: 87k
2020: 406k
Breeders took notice though. After his first crop hit the racetrack and he got 3 SWs from 21 starters (42 foals), including Goldencents, his mares bred in 2013 went to 210.